Deer Resistant Perennial Plants

Beautiful blooms that help you garden with fewer bite marks.

If deer treat your garden like a salad bar, you don’t need to give up on color—you just need smarter plant choices. Deer-resistant perennials are selected because they’re less appealing to deer (often due to strong fragrance, fuzzy leaves, tough texture, or natural compounds), and that gives your beds a better shot at staying intact through spring and summer browsing. The key is setting expectations: even the best options aren’t “deer-proof,” and local pressure (herd size, drought, winter food scarcity) changes what deer will sample. But when you build a border around plants that deer typically avoid, you dramatically reduce the heartbreak and replanting.

This collection also makes design easier because deer-resistant doesn’t mean “boring.” You can mix long bloomers with structural foliage, include options for full sun and part shade, and still create that layered, professional look—just with fewer vulnerable favorites leading the show. Maintenance stays refreshingly simple: proper spacing for airflow, deep watering while plants establish, and pruning at the right time (some, like woodland sage types, can rebloom when cut back after the first flush). And when you want a second opinion on what’s most likely to hold up in your yard, the We Grow Together Promise is there to support you.

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Acorus Ogon

Acorus Ogon

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Agastache Blue Fortune

Agastache Blue Fortune

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Agastache Golden Jubilee

Agastache Golden Jubilee

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Agastache Purple Haze

Agastache Purple Haze

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4.0
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Ajuga Bronze Beauty

Ajuga Bronze Beauty

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4.7
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Ajuga Chocolate Chip

Ajuga Chocolate Chip

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4.8
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42 Reviews
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Allium Serendipity

Allium Serendipity

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4.8
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American Gold Rush Black Eyed Susan

American Gold Rush Black Eyed Susan

$29.95

4.5
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Amsonia Hubrichtii

Amsonia Hubrichtii

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4.3
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Anna’s Red Hellebore

Anna’s Red Hellebore

$64.95

4.3
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Apricot Delight Yarrow

Apricot Delight Yarrow

$26.95

2.8
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Aquilegia ‘Corbett’

Aquilegia ‘Corbett’

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5.0
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Aster Raydon's Favorite

Aster Raydon's Favorite

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Aster ‘Bluebird’ (Smooth Aster)

Aster ‘Bluebird’ (Smooth Aster)

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Astilbe Deutschland

Astilbe Deutschland

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Astilbe Peach Blossom

Astilbe Peach Blossom

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3.2
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Astilbe Pumila

Astilbe Pumila

$27.95

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Astilbe Vision in Pink

Astilbe Vision in Pink

$32.95

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Astilbe Vision in Red

Astilbe Vision in Red

$26.95

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Astilbe Visions

Astilbe Visions

$26.95

3.8
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Autumn Bride Heuchera

Autumn Bride Heuchera

$26.95

4.0
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Autumn Brilliance Fern

Autumn Brilliance Fern

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4.6
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Becky Shasta Daisy

Becky Shasta Daisy

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3.4
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Big Blue Liriope

Big Blue Liriope

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4.5
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Black Mondo Grass

Black Mondo Grass

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4.5
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Blackhawks Big Bluestem

Blackhawks Big Bluestem

$32.95

2.0
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Blue Creeping Mazus

Blue Creeping Mazus

$17.95

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Blue Dune Lyme Grass

Blue Dune Lyme Grass

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3.8
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Blue Flag Iris

Blue Flag Iris

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Blue-Eyed Grass

Blue-Eyed Grass

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Caesar’s Brother Iris

Caesar’s Brother Iris

$28.95

4.2
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Calamintha Nepeta

Calamintha Nepeta

As Low As $27.95

4.8
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Caramel Heuchera

Caramel Heuchera

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5.0
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Carex Evergold

Carex Evergold

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Carex Everillo

Carex Everillo

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4.1
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Carex flacca ‘Blue Zinger’

Carex flacca ‘Blue Zinger’

$29.95

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Carex Ice Dance

Carex Ice Dance

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Carex Red Rooster

Carex Red Rooster

$29.95

5.0
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Cat’s Pajamas Nepeta

Cat’s Pajamas Nepeta

$32.95

3.8
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Chelone glabra

Chelone glabra

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4.4
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Cinnamon Fern

Cinnamon Fern

$32.95

3.7
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Cinnamon Snow Hellebore

Cinnamon Snow Hellebore

$69.95

4.0
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4 Reviews
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Citronelle Heuchera

Citronelle Heuchera

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4.6
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
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Delosperma Cooperi

Delosperma Cooperi

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2.6
Rated 2.6 out of 5 stars
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Protect your blooms with deer-smart plant choices.

Deer-resistant perennials help you keep the garden you planned—because they’re built around what deer tend to avoid. Many lists of deer-resistant plants are based on real-world observations from horticulture and landscape professionals, and they repeatedly highlight the same patterns: aromatic foliage, coarse texture, and certain plant compounds make browsing less likely. Think of these plants as “lower risk” choices that improve your odds, especially when deer pressure is moderate, and your beds aren’t the only food source around.

It’s also important to plan with the truth in mind: no plant is completely deer-proof. Extension guidance consistently notes that deer will eat almost anything under high pressure, and a plant that’s ignored in one neighborhood might be tested in another. That’s why the best strategy is a system: use deer-resistant perennials as the backbone, then place more tempting plants closer to the house or in protected courtyards where browsing is less frequent.

Once you plant this way, your whole landscape gets easier. You’ll spend less time replacing shredded blooms, and more time refining design—repeating the best performers, building long flowering sequences, and letting foliage textures carry the bed between bloom waves. The result is still a lush, colorful border—just one that’s better adapted to real-life deer traffic.

Enjoy fragrance, texture, and color that deer often avoid.

The “look” of deer resistance is often a good-looking garden anyway. Catmint (Nepeta × faassenii) is a classic example: it offers fragrant foliage, a long bloom season (commonly noted from May into September), and it’s listed as deer-tolerant in authoritative plant references. Pair that with other aromatic or textured choices, and you get a planting that reads soft and romantic to humans—while being less appealing to grazers.

Bloom windows can span nearly the whole growing season when you mix plant types. Hellebores are known for flowering in late winter into spring with a long bloom period, while many salvias can bloom for months (commonly June through September for woodland sage types) and may rebloom when cut back after the first flush. Add late-season performers like stonecrop selections for end-of-summer into fall color, and you’ll keep the bed active when deer pressure is often still present.

Mature size and growth rate vary widely in this category—another win for design. You’ll find compact edging candidates, medium clump-formers for the main body of a border, and taller bloomers that anchor the back of a bed. Planning around mature spread keeps plants vigorous and upright, and it helps avoid the crowded, humid conditions that can invite issues like powdery mildew on susceptible perennials.

Place them where deer pressure meets great performance.

Start with the light your site actually gets, then choose plants that thrive there. Many reliable deer-resistant perennials perform best in full sun to part shade (catmint is commonly listed for full sun to part shade), and strong light generally supports better flowering and sturdier growth. For shady areas, you can still build a deer-resistant bed—just use shade-tolerant options and treat “deer-resistant” as a probability play, not a promise.

Spacing is part of deer strategy because it keeps plants healthier and easier to maintain. As a practical rule, many clump-forming perennials are spaced roughly 12–24 inches apart, depending on mature width, while larger clumps may need 24–36 inches; the goal is airflow and room to grow into a dense, resilient planting. Dense, stressed plants are more likely to look ragged after browsing, and they’re harder to clean up quickly.

Use placement to reduce browsing opportunities. Put your most deer-resistant, aromatic, and textured plants along the outer edges of beds as a first line of defense, and reserve more tempting plants for closer-to-home spaces where deer are less comfortable lingering. Extension guidance emphasizes that site conditions and deer behavior matter as much as plant choice, so this “design for pressure” approach is often what turns good plant selection into great results.

Keep care easy and plants strong all season.

Healthy plants recover better, so “easy care” is part of deer resistance. Focus on good drainage, deep watering while plants establish, and avoiding over-fertilizing with high nitrogen (which can push soft growth that’s more attractive to pests and more prone to some diseases). Once established, many deer-resistant staples are quite low-maintenance—especially aromatic and drought-tolerant types that prefer well-drained soil.

Pruning and deadheading are your performance tools. Deadheading can encourage additional blooms on some perennials and keep beds looking tidy through the long season, while selective cutbacks can trigger fresh flowering on certain plants. For example, woodland sage types are known to rebloom after spent stems are cut down, a simple way to keep color going without replanting.

Watch for the common garden realities: powdery mildew can show up on susceptible plants, especially when airflow is poor, so spacing and sunlight are your best prevention. And if you’re gardening with pets, be aware that some “deer-resistant” favorites rely on toxicity to stay off the menu—hellebore and foxglove are both listed as toxic to dogs and cats—so place them thoughtfully where chewing isn’t likely.